{"id":272,"date":"2021-07-31T13:10:44","date_gmt":"2021-07-31T18:10:44","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/marceauxlawfirm.com\/?post_type=blog_post&p=272"},"modified":"2022-02-17T14:38:03","modified_gmt":"2022-02-17T19:38:03","slug":"industrial-murder-fatal-work-place-accident-risks","status":"publish","type":"blog_post","link":"https:\/\/marceauxlawfirm.com\/blog-post\/industrial-murder-fatal-work-place-accident-risks\/","title":{"rendered":"Industrial Murder: Fatal Work Place Accident Risks"},"content":{"rendered":"

You were all geared up for your interview at the industrial recruitment office…that is until you began to overhear other potential workers discussing their hesitations about safety. They spoke about stories they heard of people losing their arms in industrial accidents, and how industrial fatalities are on the rise.<\/p>\n

Although they were still obviously interested in the employment and pay of an industrial job, their conversation began to bring doubt into your own mind.<\/p>\n

Are industrial jobs really that dangerous?<\/p>\n

Risking it All for the Job<\/h2>\n

The 2014 National Consensus of Fatal Injuries, conducted by the Bureau of Labor Statistics and the U.S. Department of Labor, a preliminary estimate of 4,405 fatal work injuries were recorded in the United States. Private industrial accidents made up 3,929 of these fatalities, making industrial workplace accidents an extreme priority for the Occupation Safety and Health Administration\u2019s (OSHA) standards.<\/p>\n

Although, with the help of OSHA, worker deaths have drastically decreased over the past 50 years from an average of 38 a day in 1970, to 12 a day at present, the following fatal injuries are still alarmingly common in today\u2019s industrial world. The following are the most common injuries:<\/p>\n